Sir, – In the 1950s, the local authorities in Wensleydale built small developments of good houses on the outskirts of every village with the intention that these should be available as affordable housing in perpetuity.

Following the Right to Buy legislation of the Thatcher government, they were offered to the tenants at sacrificial prices, making a huge gift from the public purse to fortunate individuals.

Typically, these houses were sold for under £10,000 and are now worth £200,000. Practically every council house in the Dale was sold as the tenants rightly recognised the huge bonus they were being offered.

The result is that this pool of affordable housing has gone and the situation is hugely exacerbated now by the inflation in house prices, driven by wealth from outside the area, and the absence of land for development, meaning that purchase in the open market is way beyond the means of most young people from local families. This has been socially disastrous, resulting in an ageing population, erosion of local services and falling numbers in local schools.

Now we learn that a Conservative government would seek to extend this bonanza from the public purse to yet more fortunate individuals who just happen to be Housing Association tenants.

This is clearly attractive to the individuals concerned, and I would not blame them for taking advantage of it, but it does result in yet further reduction of affordable housing stock which cannot be replaced by reinvesting the sale proceeds of houses sold at a seventy percent discount, quite apart from the absence of sites to build them on. The problem is apparently to be further compounded by local authorities being required to sell their houses when they become vacant.

I have related this situation to Wensleydale but the same considerations apply to a greater or lesser degree to most areas throughout the country. I believe that this is a deeply damaging proposal which must be resisted.

GERALD HODGSON

Spennithorne, Leyburn.